Washington University School of Medicine, Anatomy and Neurobiology, 660 S. Euclid Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Sleep. 2011 Feb 1;34(2):137-46. doi: 10.1093/sleep/34.2.137.
Multiple lines of evidence indicate that sleep is important for the developing brain, although little is known about which cellular and molecular pathways are affected. Thus, the aim of this study was to determine whether the early adult life of Drosophila, which is associated with high amounts of sleep and critical periods of brain plasticity, could be used as a model to identify developmental processes that require sleep.
Wild type Canton-S Drosophila melanogaster. DESIGN;
Flies were sleep deprived on their first full day of adult life and allowed to recover undisturbed for at least 3 days. The animals were then tested for short-term memory and response-inhibition using aversive phototaxis suppression (APS). Components of dopamine signaling were further evaluated using mRNA profiling, immunohistochemistry, and pharmacological treatments.
Flies exposed to acute sleep deprivation on their first day of life showed impairments in short-term memory and response inhibition that persisted for at least 6 days. These impairments in adult performance were reversed by dopamine agonists, suggesting that the deficits were a consequence of reduced dopamine signaling. However, sleep deprivation did not impact dopaminergic neurons as measured by their number or by the levels of dopamine, pale (tyrosine hydroxylase), dopadecarboxylase, and the Dopamine transporter. However, dopamine pathways were impacted as measured by increased transcript levels of the dopamine receptors D2R and dDA1. Importantly, blocking signaling through the dDA1 receptor in animals that were sleep deprived during their critical developmental window prevented subsequent adult learning impairments.
These data indicate that sleep plays an important and phylogenetically conserved role in the developing brain.
有多项证据表明,睡眠对大脑发育很重要,尽管人们对受影响的细胞和分子途径知之甚少。因此,本研究的目的是确定 Drosophila 的成年早期是否可以作为一个模型,用于识别需要睡眠的发育过程,因为这个阶段果蝇睡眠量大且大脑具有可塑性。
野生型黑腹果蝇 Canton-S。
在果蝇成年后的第一天剥夺其睡眠,并至少让其不受干扰地恢复 3 天。然后使用厌恶光趋性抑制(Aversive Phototaxis Suppression,APS)测试动物的短期记忆和反应抑制能力。使用 mRNA 谱分析、免疫组织化学和药物治疗进一步评估多巴胺信号通路的成分。
在生命的第一天经历急性睡眠剥夺的果蝇表现出短期记忆和反应抑制的缺陷,这种缺陷至少持续 6 天。成年期表现的这些缺陷可以通过多巴胺激动剂逆转,表明缺陷是由于多巴胺信号减少所致。然而,睡眠剥夺并没有像通过其数量或多巴胺、苍白(酪氨酸羟化酶)、多巴胺脱羧酶和多巴胺转运体的水平来衡量那样影响多巴胺能神经元。然而,多巴胺通路受到影响,多巴胺受体 D2R 和 dDA1 的转录水平增加。重要的是,在关键发育窗口期被剥夺睡眠的动物中阻断 dDA1 受体的信号传递可防止随后的成年学习障碍。
这些数据表明,睡眠在发育中的大脑中起着重要的和进化保守的作用。